Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis Bombs at the Box Office



After decades in the making — involving several cycles of shelving and revisiting, a personal investment of $120 million, casting scandals, on-set scandals, trailer scandals, and more — Francis Ford Coppola’s passion project, Megalopolis, finally opened in theaters this past weekend. Unfortunately, it’s showing at the box office left much to be desired.

Opening to wide release on Friday (September 27th), Megalopolis brought in only $4 million over its first weekend, seemingly sealing its fate as a box office flop in the face of Coppola’s gamble that self-funding the film would be worth it to not have to deal with studio oversight. As Consequence’s Liz Shannon Miller wrote in her review, the film is becoming “the world’s most expensive cautionary tale when it comes to spending $120 million of one’s own money so that you don’t have to listen to studio notes.”

Coppola first conceived the concept for Megalopolis in the 1980s, hoping to interlope Roman history and modern America for a story about humanity, society, and power. In the years since, the film has gone in and out of production limbo, but ultimately came into fruition over the past few years, with a cast consisting of Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, Nathalie Emmanuel, Aubrey Plaza, and more.

But despite Coppola’s sweeping vision, Megalopolis’ positive attributes feel, as Miller said in her review, “overshadowed by the film’s worst choices,” which include casting “people who were canceled” — like the disgraced Shia LaBeouf — for the sheer sake of not appearing like a “woke Hollywood production.”

Additionally, there were controversies regarding Coppola’s allegedly inappropriate and unprofessional behavior towards extras on set, and a bizarre blunder in which the film’s trailer used fake quotes, resulting in it being pulled by the film’s distributor, Lionsgate (who issued an apology for “screwing up”).

On top of all of that, audiences seem to just not like the film very much, with it only receiving a D+ rating via CinemaScore.

For more, revisit Consequence’s interview with Megalopolis’ star, Adam Driver, discussing the film’s production process, Coppola’s vision, and more.



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